2. ELSIE JOHNSON MCDOUGALD
Throughout the year s of histor y, woman has been the weather -vane, the
indicator, showing in which direction the wind of destiny blows. Her status
and development have augured now calm and stability, now swif t currents of
progress. What then is to be said of the Negro woman of to -day, whose
problems are of such impor t to her race?
Here, more than anywhere else, the Negro woman is free from the cruder
handicaps of primitive household hardships and the grosser forms of sex and
race subjugation. Here, she has considerable oppor tunity to measure her
power s in the intellectual and industrial fields of the great city. The
questions naturally arise: “ What are her dif ficulties?” and, “How is she
solving them?”
To answer these questions, one must have in mind not any one Negro woman,
but rather a color ful pageant of individuals, each dif ferently endowed. Like
the red and yellow of the tiger -lily, the skin of one is brilliant against the
star-lit darkness of a racial sister. From grace to strength, they var y in
infinite degree, with traces of the race’s histor y lef t in physical and mental
outline on each. With a discerning mind, one catches the multiform charm,
beauty and character of Negro women, and grasps the fact that their
problems cannot be thought of in mass .
~ from “The Double Task”
3. ELSIE JOHNSON MCDOUGALD
Throughout the year s of histor y, woman has been the weather -vane, the
indicator, showing in which direction the wind of destiny blows. Her status
and development have augured now calm and stability, now swif t currents of
progress. What then is to be said of the Negro woman of to -day, whose
problems are of such impor t to her race?
Here, more than anywhere else, the Negro woman is free from the cruder
handicaps of primitive household hardships and the grosser forms of sex and
race subjugation. Here, she has considerable oppor tunity to measure her
power s in the intellectual and industrial fields of the great city. The
questions naturally arise: “ What are her dif ficulties?” and, “How is she
solving them?”
To answer these questions, one must have in mind not any one Negro
woman, but rather a color ful pageant of individuals, each dif ferently
endowed. Like the red and yellow of the tiger -lily, the skin of one is brilliant
against the star -lit darkness of a racial sister. From grace to strength, they
var y in infinite degree, with traces of the race’s histor y lef t in physical and
mental outline on each. With a discerning mind, one catches the multiform
charm, beauty and character of Negro women, and grasps the fact that their
problems cannot be thought of in mass .
~ from “The Double Task”
10. ELSIE JOHNSON MCDOUGALD
Throughout the year s of histor y, woman has been the weather -vane, the
indicator, showing in which direction the wind of destiny blows. Her status
and development have augured now calm and stability, now swif t currents of
progress. What then is to be said of the Negro woman of to -day, whose
problems are of such impor t to her race?
Here, more than anywhere else, the Negro woman is free from the cruder
handicaps of primitive household hardships and the grosser forms of sex and
race subjugation. Here, she has considerable oppor tunity to measure her
power s in the intellectual and industrial fields of the great city. The
questions naturally arise: “ What are her dif ficulties?” and, “How is she
solving them?”
To answer these questions, one must have in mind not any one Negro woman,
but rather a color ful pageant of individuals, each dif ferently endowed. Like
the red and yellow of the tiger -lily, the skin of one is brilliant against the
star-lit darkness of a racial sister. From grace to strength, they var y in
infinite degree, with traces of the race’s histor y lef t in physical and mental
outline on each. With a discerning mind, one catches the multiform charm,
beauty and character of Negro women, and grasps the fact that their
problems cannot be thought of in mass .
~ from “The Double Task”